Introduction to the gods
Download
Report
Transcript Introduction to the gods
Introduction to the gods
Information and images taken from
http://www.theoi.com/Pantheon.html
Zeus
• Zeus was the king of
the gods, the god of
sky and weather,
law, order and fate.
He was depicted as a
regal man, mature
with sturdy figure
and dark beard. His
usual attributes were
a lightning bolt,
royal scepter and
eagle.
Poseidon
• Poseidon was the
great Olympian god
of the sea, rivers,
flood and drought,
earthquakes, and
horses.
He was depicted as a
mature man of
sturdy build with a
dark beard, and
holding a trident.
Hera
• Hera was the Olympian
queen of the gods and the
goddess of women and
marriage. She was also a
goddess of the sky and
starry heavens. She was
usually depicted as a
beautiful woman wearing
a crown and holding a
royal, lotus-tipped staff.
Sometimes she held a
royal lion or had a cuckoo
or hawk as her familiar.
Demeter
• Demeter was the great
Olympian goddess of
agriculture, grain, and
bread, the prime
sustenance of mankind.
She also presided over the
foremost of the Mystery
Cults which promised its
intiates the path to a
blessed afterlife. Demeter
was depicted as a mature
woman, often crowned
and holding sheafs of
wheat and and a torch.
Apollo
• Apollo was the great
Olympian god of
prophecy and oracles,
healing, plague and
disease, music, song and
poetry, archery, and the
protection of the young.
He was depicted as a
handsome, beardless
youth with long hair and
various attributes
including:--a wreath and
branch of laurel; bow and
quiver; raven; and lyre.
Artemis
• Artemis was the great Olympian
goddess of hunting, wilderness
and wild animals. She was also a
goddess of childbirth, and the
protectress of the girl child up to
the age of marriage. Her twin
brother Apollon was similarly the
protector of the boy child.
Together the two gods were also
bringers of sudden death and
disease--Artemis targetted
women and girls, and Apollon
men and boys.
Athena
• Athena was the great
Olympian goddess of wise
counsel, war, the defense of
towns, heroic endeavor,
weaving, pottery and other
crafts. She was depicted
crowned with a crested helm,
armed with shield and spear,
and wearing the snaketrimmed cloak wrapped
around her breast and arm,
adorned with the monstrous
head of the Gorgon.
Ares
• Ares was the great
Olympian god of war,
battlelust, civil order
and manly courage.
In Greek art he was
depicted as either a
mature, bearded
warrior dressed in
battle arms, or a
nude beardless
youth with helm and
spear
Aphrodite
• Aphrodite was the great
Olympian goddess of
beauty, love, pleasure
and and procreation.
She was depicted as a
beautiful woman usually
accompanied by the
winged godling Eros
(Love). Her attributes
included a dove, apple,
scallop shell and mirror.
Hermes
• Hermes was the great Olympian God of
animal husbandry, roads, travel,
hospitality, heralds, diplomacy, trade,
thievery, language, writing, persuasion,
cunning wiles, athletic contests,
gymnasiums, astronomy, and astrology.
He was also the personal agent and
herald of Zeus, the king of the gods.
Hermes was depicted as either a
handsome and athletic, beardless youth,
or as an older bearded man. His
attributes included the herald's wand or
kerykeion (Latin caduceus), winged
boots, and sometimes a winged travellers
cap and chlamys cloak.
Hephaistos
• Hephaistos was the
great Olympian god
of fire,
metalworking,
stonemasonry and
the art of sculpture.
He was usually
depicted as a
bearded man holding
hammer and tongs-the tools of a smith-and riding a donkey.
Dionysus
• Dionysus was the great
Olympian god of wine,
vegetation, pleasure and
festivity. He was depicted as
either an older bearded god or
a pretty effeminate, longhaired youth. His attributes
included the thyrsos (a pinecone tipped staff), drinking
cup, leopard and fruiting vine.
He was usually accompanied
by a troop of Satyrs and
Mainades (female devotees or
nymphs).
Hestia
• Hestia was the virgin goddess
of the hearth (both private and
municipal) and the home. As
the goddess of the family
hearth she also presided over
the cooking of bread and the
preparation of the family meal.
Hestia was also the goddess of
the sacrificial flame and
received a share of every
sacrifice to the gods. The
cooking of the communal feast
of sacrificial meat was naturally
a part of her domain.
Hades
• Hades was the King of the
Underworld, the god of death and
the dead. He presided over funeral
rites and defended the right of the
dead to due burial. Hades was also
the god of the hidden wealth of the
earth, from the fertile soil with
nourished the seed-grain, to the
mined wealth of gold, silver and
other metals.